Eurasian Journal of Emergency Medicine (Dec 2014)

Hypocalcemic Convulsion in a Six-Year-Old Child with Vitamin D Deficiency

  • Mehmet Tekin,
  • Çapan Konca,
  • Abdulgani Gülyüz

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5152/jaem.2014.251
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. 206 – 208

Abstract

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Nutritional rickets occurs more commonly in breastfed infants with rapid growth and limited exposure to sunlight. Hypocalcemic convulsions secondary to vitamin D deficiency occur largely in patients with rapid growth rates, such as children younger than 1 year and adolescents. Vitamin D deficiency seems to be an unrecognized and prevalent problem in school childhood. Whereas infants generally exhibit bony deformities, most school-aged children are asymptomatic. In this case, we present hypocalcemic convulsion in a 6-year-old boy with nutritional vitamin D deficiency in order to emphasize that hypocalcemia secondary to vitamin D deficiency can lead to convulsion in other children, as well as infants and adolescents.

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